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How to Lose Body Fat: What Actually Works

Last updated: May 2026

How to Lose Body Fat: What Actually Works

Losing body fat requires a sustained calorie deficit — consistently burning more energy than you consume. The specific combination of exercise and diet matters less than creating that deficit and maintaining it long enough for meaningful fat loss to occur. Here’s what the evidence shows works.

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The Fundamental Principle: Calorie Deficit

Body fat is stored energy. Your body burns it when energy intake is consistently lower than energy expenditure. One pound of fat is approximately 3,500 calories — a deficit of 500 calories per day produces roughly 1 lb of fat loss per week in most people.

Realistic fat loss rates:

The Most Important Thing You Need to Know: You Can’t Spot-Reduce

It is physiologically impossible to target fat loss in a specific body area by exercising that area. Sit-ups build abdominal muscles but do not remove abdominal fat. When your body burns triglycerides (fat) for energy during exercise, it draws from fat stores throughout the entire body — not from the area you’re working.

This means belly fat, thigh fat, and arm fat all respond to the same intervention: total body fat reduction through calorie deficit. The only way fat disappears from any specific location is by losing fat overall.

Exercise: What Type Works Best

Aerobic exercise (most effective for total fat loss)

Aerobic exercise forces your heart to pump more blood and your muscles to consume more energy, burning stored fat in the process. It’s the most direct route to a calorie deficit through exercise.

Strength training (preserves and builds muscle)

Strength training doesn’t burn as many calories per session as aerobic exercise, but it builds muscle mass — and muscle burns more calories at rest than fat tissue. Every kilogram of muscle added increases your resting metabolic rate, meaning you burn more calories throughout the day even without exercise.

HIIT (high-intensity interval training)

HIIT alternates short bursts of intense effort with recovery periods. It burns significant calories in less time and has been shown to specifically reduce visceral (abdominal) fat. Popular formats include Tabata, sprint intervals, and circuit training. Effective for people with limited time, but high impact on the body — 2–3 sessions per week is enough alongside other exercise.

Related Reading

Visceral Fat: Why Abdominal Fat Is More Dangerous Than Total Body Fat →

Diet: What to Focus On

Create the deficit — but not too large

A 300–500 calorie daily deficit is the standard recommendation for sustained fat loss. Larger deficits (700+ calories) accelerate weight loss in the short term but increase muscle loss, reduce energy for exercise, and often cause compensatory overeating. The goal is sustainable fat loss — not the fastest possible scale weight drop.

Prioritize protein

Protein has the highest thermic effect of any macronutrient (25–30% of protein calories are burned in digestion). More importantly, adequate protein intake is the primary dietary factor in preserving muscle during a calorie deficit. Aim for 1.6–2.2g of protein per kilogram of body weight during fat loss phases. Practical sources: chicken, fish, eggs, dairy, legumes, tofu.

Foods that reduce body fat accumulation

Foods that promote fat gain

Sleep: The Underestimated Fat Loss Factor

Poor sleep quality or insufficient sleep (less than 7 hours) independently increases body fat, particularly visceral fat. The mechanism is cortisol — the stress hormone. Sleep deprivation raises cortisol, which signals the body to store more fat around internal organs.

Research shows that people in a calorie deficit who sleep poorly lose significantly more muscle and less fat than those who sleep 8 hours. The same calorie deficit produces different body composition outcomes depending on sleep quality.

Aim for 7–9 hours of quality sleep per night as a non-negotiable component of any fat loss program.

Stress Management

Chronic stress chronically elevates cortisol, which directly promotes visceral fat accumulation regardless of calorie intake. This is why people under high work or life stress can gain abdominal fat even without significantly changing their diet.

Practical stress management approaches with evidence of effectiveness:

What a Sustainable Fat Loss Week Looks Like

Based on the evidence, a practical weekly approach:

At this pace, expect 0.5–1 kg (1–2 lbs) of fat loss per week. Over 8–12 weeks, this produces 4–12 kg of fat loss — meaningful, visible changes that can be sustained because the approach doesn’t require severe restriction or misery.

Related Reading

Body Fat Percentage by Age: How Composition Changes Over Time →

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to lose body fat?

At a sustainable rate of 0.5–1 kg per week, noticeable changes in body composition typically appear after 4–8 weeks. Meaningful reductions in body fat percentage (2–5%) typically take 8–16 weeks of consistent effort. Visceral fat responds faster — often visible changes within 6–8 weeks of consistent aerobic exercise.

Is it possible to lose fat without losing muscle?

Yes, but it requires the right conditions: high protein intake (1.6–2g/kg), strength training to maintain muscle stimulus, a moderate (not severe) calorie deficit, and adequate sleep. This is called a “body recomposition” approach. It’s slower than aggressive calorie restriction but produces superior long-term results.

Track Your Fat Loss Progress

Measure your body fat percentage before starting your program and recheck every 4 weeks to track actual fat loss — not just scale weight.

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Dennis Kiplimo
Written by
Dennis Kiplimo

Dennis Kiplimo is a Registered Nurse and founder of Denstar Fitness. He publishes fitness calculators and writes about training, nutrition and health on Medium.

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